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5 Answers
5

It's translated as “actually", "really", "just"; it is used to show your emphasis. It's a very tricky expression because it has no negative meaning, while it has a negative look (不).You usually use this word in a sentence as a response to show your disagreement with the speaker.

You and your friends go hiking in a big mountain, and you get lost. Fortunately, you have a GPS device, and it helps you get out of the adversity. When you are safe, one of your friends says, "Thank goodness!". You would say,

这还不是因为我带了GPS导航仪。= It is really because I took the GPS navigator along.

Here, You imply that he should thank you!Not thank goodness!.

And another one would say

还不是我叫你带上的。=It's I who asks you to take it along.

Now,he wants everyone to know that they should thank him :)

还不是因为爱。= (It is) really because of love.

I also want to show you the negative form of this expression, you would say:

I kind of "heavily" edited your answer correcting wording and changing the formatting. I think I didn't change anything regarding the meaning, but just check it to be sure. :)
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Alenanno♦Dec 18 '11 at 0:32

@Alenanno I noticed you changed my answer too. Mostly just re-formatting. Is there a standard way to present translations when English & Chinese sentences side by side? Or is it just personal preference?
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StarCubDec 18 '11 at 0:38

@StarCub I don't think so, but I think translations on the side are better readable than translations under the original sentence. It's just a matter of "visual order". Of course people can rollback, though. :)
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Alenanno♦Dec 18 '11 at 0:58

@StarCub I think you mean "not equal to" by "!=", so what's the problem? I said “还真不" was the negative form of “还不"
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HuangDec 18 '11 at 1:50

Just note that this is simply a mnemonic device as the traditional character (還) does not contain the 不 element nor any other elements that connote negation. I suspect the 不 element in the simplified character is merely a phonetic component.
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BjornDec 21 '11 at 19:29

I like this structure a bit better than "It's all/really because of love" because one usually says this phrase with a sort of half-questioning tone, rather than a flat declarative tone.
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weiyDec 21 '11 at 20:04

还不是 can be translated to English literally as isn't.
Actually, sometimes we can add a 吗 to the end of that sentence without changing its meaning like “还不是因为爱吗?”.
So the answer is obvious,
还不是因为爱 means “isn't it because of love?” or "it is because of love, isn't it?"
In the same way, ‘还不都怪你？’ can be translated as "It's your fault, isn't it?"